Torrent Research Finds More Pirate Bay Users Are Hiding Their IP-Address After 'Six Strike' Policy

The cat and mouse game between BitTorrent users and the copyright police continues with a study by The Pirate Bay finding that 70 percent of its fans currently use or are interested in using a service that would make them harder to identify.

New measures from the U.S. Department of Justice and major Internet providers have made online pirates nervous about their downloading habits. It’s easier than ever for music and movie companies to find out exactly who is downloading their content illegally. When someone downloads a movie or album from a site like The Pirate Bay his IP address -- a number that’s specific to his Internet connection -- is visible for the whole world to see.

Torrent Freak reported that 75,000 people were polled about their downloading security, and most said they were at least interested in finding out how to better conceal themselves from organizations like the MPAA that may try to sue them. The number of respondents who said they already try to hide their online activity was at 17.8 percent, with 51.4 percent interested in finding out more.

Most users who are able to hide their online identity do so with a BitTorrent proxy or by setting up their own virtual private network (VPN).

“The broad interest for anonymity is, in this study, understood as a function of social norms in the grass-root file-sharing community, as a response to the ongoing top-down copyright enforcement strategies,” the researchers wrote, according to Torrent Freak.

“Users involved in file-sharing communities seem to find anonymity services as a countermeasure for an increase in enforced traceability and identification of online activities.”

Users in North America and Africa hid their IP addresses most frequently, perhaps because of the strict copyright laws that pervade those areas. Approximately one third of Pirate Bay users upload files to the Swedish torrent site every day, while somewhere around 14 percent never upload anything.

Earlier this year the major U.S. Internet providers announced a “six strike” policy of trying to halt online piracy. Time Warner, Comcast, Verizon, AT&T and Cablevision customers will now be monitored by their ISP, which will gauge high-bandwidth downloads in trying to determine what is an illegal file.

Customers who are suspected of having downloaded content illegally will be given a series of warnings before their Internet service is suspended and legal penalties imposed. The service providers have no legal obligation to enforce the policies but so far almost all have appeared willing to do so.

Researcher Stefan Larsson told Torrent Freak it is these policies that are causing Pirate Bay users to hide themselves.

“Some people may stop or share less when they receive warnings, but there will also be a group that will respond to the warnings by becoming more anonymous. A third group will try to find other means to share files than BitTorrent, since these are not monitored,” he said.